
HE8217;S out of his cocoon. At least until April when the concerts end. 8216;8216;Then I8217;ll go back to my producers and into my shell,8217;8217; chuckles India8217;s most reticent music director.
True to his word, there8217;s an impressive line-up of producers waiting for him to belt out those strains. Shyam Benegal, Atul Agnihotri, Rakesh Mehra, M F Husain, Ahmed Khan, Subhash Ghai and the big one8230;a Chinese film for Columbia Tristar, which is due for release in May or June.
What happened to the man who couldn8217;t find his voice at at an awards function years ago? 8216;8216;I8217;ve learnt the importance of presentation from Bombay Dreams. I8217;ve never been a part of a theatre production and people there don8217;t expect you to go into hiding.8217;8217;
Rahman tackles the volley of questions with ease. 8216;8216;There wasn8217;t much excitement initially, in fact, Bombay Dreams was booked only for a week. I was nervous about how people would receive it, but it8217;s been groundbreaking, the music was a revelation when I heard the English lyrics.8217;8217;
The extravagant production will be travelling to Toronto next. 8216;8216;It won8217;t come to India,8217;8217; the ace composer says with a hint of sadness, 8216;8216;The
budget and dates didn8217;t work out. Anyway we8217;ve addressed issues such as Dharavi, which may not be as exciting for Mumbai. You can take Bombay to London, but you can8217;t bring it back to Bombay.8217;8217; In Mumbai, for an AIDS concert organised by the Mukti Foundation, Rahman talks about striking a
balance. 8216;8216;The more you go towards the West, the more you8217;re rooted in your native music,8217;8217; says the 36-year-old musician.
Trashing past criticism which accused him of
excessive digitilisation, he says, 8216;8216;I think ahead of time and have tried to do justice to both electronic and acoustic systems. But it8217;s easy to pick the shortest way and put down someone8217;s work by criticism.8217;8217; In the same breath he adds that his music did turn monotonous between 8217;96 and 8217;98. 8216;8216;But the stereotypes vanished with the criticism. I don8217;t know how,8217;8217; he smiles.
The expectations have only increased over the years. Tours, films, non-film albums that complete the circle. Almost. 8216;8216;But the pace strangles you sometimes because music is no longer just an art. And then I escape.8217;8217;
The Andrew Lloyd Weber production was one such safety valve. There are more. A pop album for UK-based BMG artiste Karen David, an orchestral album with the Royal Philharmonic and a regional album. 8216;8216;I wanted to bring Stevie Wonder for the concert, but he8217;s cracking something new and the budget wasn8217;t right.8217;8217;
Concerts, according to the maestro are exciting
because they involve fine tuning a whole orchestra to one frequency. 8216;8216;But I can8217;t operate the way Weber does 8212; he manages his business and coordinates a million other things. I8217;d rather be left to my music,8217;8217; says the man who swayed the music scene with Roja in 8217;92. He looks every bit the crouching tiger, waiting to make yet another leap.